SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 26
Nagy 1
Working for Appalachia Service Project
Overview Description:
This summer I worked as a Center Director for Appalachia Service Project. My job was
fast paced, strenuous, and required a great deal of professionalism and responsibility. As a
Center Director (CD) I ran one of ASPโ€™s 26 county summer centers. Each center is responsible
for the home repair operations within a county within Central Appalachia, and I was stationed in
Fentress County, Tennessee. I had a direct supervisor, a Program Manager, to oversee Fentress
and 3 additional counties and was based out of Johnson City, Tennessee, so I was the point
person on site 24/7. The center operations that I managed included the repairs on 16 different
homes in which I lead a staff team of 4 employees in identifying these projects, selecting the
homes from the many applications we received, planning the construction that was to be done,
purchasing the correct materials needed, and managing the volunteer labor on a daily basis while
construction was underway. In addition, my staff and I facilitated close to 100 volunteers per
week for 7 weeks, ensuring they were comfortable in their housing arrangements, properly fed,
and provided nightly programming to help them reflect on their week of service, grow in their
spirituality, and learn more about the poverty in Fentress County and the region of Central
Appalachia.
While many aspects of these collective responsibilities were performed by every member
of my staff, I was responsible for ensuring these operations as a whole ran smoothly, assigned
daily tasks to individuals, responded to any volunteer or homeowner complaints, was the primary
contact for any problems that arose, and led a nightly staff meeting to communicate operations
and needs within my staff. In addition to managing our communal responsibilities, I also
Nagy 2
oversaw each stafferโ€™s individual positional responsibilities in order to maintain smooth and
holistic operations at my facility. These job requirements include the following: the Finance
Coordinator tracked our budget, inputted all receipts, and documented donations; the Logistics
Coordinator managed the upkeep and stocking of our Supply Room, ensured needed materials
were bulk-ordered and appropriately delivered to their correct sites, and maintained our company
vehicles; the Operations Coordinator oversaw the cleaning and upkeep of our facility, purchased
all of our food, managed our hired cooks in the preparation of meals, and put on a weekly picnic
for the families we served and the volunteers; and finally, the Volunteer Coordinator executed all
pre-trip communication with each group that came to volunteer with us, updated the centerโ€™s
Facebook page twice a week, documented project progress with photographs, and conducted data
entry into the company data base, ASPire. In our nightly meetings I ensured that all positional
deadlines were being met and that all of their work was done to the standard of excellence I
maintained for my center, but also gaged the overall health and happiness of my staffers to
ensure that their individual needs were being met.
My individual responsibilities as a CD also included the management of our centerโ€™s
budget to ensure we were on track, determined our long-range plans for each construction project
which dictated the work we did and the timeline of that work to ensure it fit within our budget,
gave formal positional feedback to each of my employees twice throughout the summer, filled
out all paperwork with homeowners, hired subcontractors where needed, built positive
community relationships, applied for additional funding for all plumbing and electrical projects
through an ASP grant, regularly communicated with my Program Manager and other members of
our headquarter office, and directly responded to all crises that arouse (including volunteer
injuries on site, dangerous weather, damaged community relationships, potential safety risks on a
Nagy 3
site, and a car accident just to name a few direct examples). The job was overwhelming at times
and stressful, but it taught me about managing people, developing systems, customer service, and
how critical attention to detail can be, but the main thing to know about my job was this summer
was that I was in charge of making the chaos look effortless and responding to needs in a timely
manner despite the wide variety of other things I always had going on.
Weekly Journal:
Week 1: Value Proposition. What is the VP of your company?
Appalachia Service Project is a non-profit home repair ministry based in Central
Appalachia providing free, major, emergency construction to families living in substandard
housing through volunteer labor with staff management. As a Christian-founded organization
we are devoted to providing a relational ministry that promotes love and acceptance for all those
our staff comes in contact withโ€”volunteers, donors, community members, and homeowners
alike. Our belief that each human is imbued with dignity and self-worth and that safe, sanitary
housing is a basic human right drives our work.
Week 2: Customers. Who is your customer? What is the target market? What strategies are
implemented to reach this target market? What are the channels by which your company reaches
their customers? How does your company manage customer relationships?
ASP has dual โ€œcustomersโ€ that serve different aspects of its service who are referred to as
its customers and its clients. Our clients receive our home repair services free of charge, while
our customers are paying our operations fee in exchange for a short-term mission experience.
Nagy 4
We define our clients as the families receiving our construction services and whose
homes are being repaired. This target market includes the families living in Central Appalachia
who are identified as living in substandard conditions, in which their homes are unsafe and
unhealthy to live in. ASP works in individual counties each summerโ€” in 2016 we served 26
counties across North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. The 2016
target market included the homes in each of these counties currently in substandard conditions,
and we made our selections of individuals who had submitted an application to ASP. The home
selection process includes the review of these applications, staff members visiting the home, and
then a Center Director selecting the homes we will be able to begin construction for based on
factors such as time, budget, volunteer skill level. We aim to work on 300-500 homes across our
service area each summer, but that still requires us to turn down 1 in 5 applications we receive.
We reach our clients through our community contacts throughout the year, who are individuals
and other organizations present in these communities throughout the year who are able to spread
the word about our services. We manage all of these relationships during the summer within the
counties with constant visits and communication to foster strong partnerships, and then on our
offseason (non-summer months when we do not have a full staff or volunteers present) ASP has
a County Set-Up team who maintains and develops these relationships so they are ready for
operations each summer.
The second aspect of our system is our customers who are our volunteers. Our services
are completely free to our homeowners, and it is our volunteers and additional donors who fund
the majority of our work. Each individual volunteer pays a fee for their week with us that covers
their food and housing for the week and contributes to our cost of materials for our projects, staff
salaries, and operational expenses. (I will later discuss ASPโ€™s additional revenue streams that
Nagy 5
complement volunteer fees, such as donors, grants and governmental funding.) ASP has a strong
focus on customer service to ensure that our revenue streams remain plentiful so we can continue
to provide our services. Our target market for our volunteers and donors are focused on mainline
denominational churches, specifically their youth programsโ€”with a heavy focus on states along
the east coast who would have lower travel costs for a potential trip. Our centers are filled with a
wide variety of groups and churches, most of which get recruited at different youth conferences,
informational fairs, or by word of mouth. ASP has an Advancement Department that is
responsible for the recruitment and retention of our volunteer groups. Once a group has been
recruited to our ministry, they arrive at our ASP center and then the center staff (the 4-6 group of
college-aged summer staffers, lead by a Center Director, which is my position this summer) is
responsible for providing them a positive experience to make them want to come back year-to-
year.
Week 3: Key Partners. Who are key partners of your company? How does your company
interact with the local community? Are there any national or international partnerships? How
does this affect the company?
ASP partners with a lot of local organizations within each of their summer counties.
There has been national push back against short-term missions, and ASP has increased their
focus on being a partner in the communities they serve to ensure that we are a year-round
presence and not just a 7-week summer tornado when we have volunteers on sites. Each county
varies in their community partners but the Center Directors are responsible for ensuring we are
working as a part of the larger community. We interact very closely with each of our 26
communities. Our staff lives in the communities they are serving throughout the summer and
Nagy 6
gets to know those who regularly work at the various establishments we are regulars at (i.e. the
hardware store, grocery store, restaurants, gas stations, laundry mats). We also serve
somewhere between 15-25 homeowners throughout our summer, in which we are working
within a familyโ€™s home and we get to know them very closely. One of ASPโ€™s mottos is that we
are โ€œa relationship ministry with construction on the sideโ€ and it is practiced daily as we focus on
the individuals we serve, the regional issues we see, and how we go about our work. ASP tries
to remain focused on our communities, and because we are often a economical beneficiary of a
community, we do not have any national or international partnerships. Where we can we
purchase construction materials, food and other operational materials from local vendors to boost
their economy. By focusing on these local partnerships rather than national ones, we are able to
remain small-scale in our operations, focus on the relationship aspects of our work. This focus
on local partnerships, ASP is able to keep their small-scale, personable identity even as their size
increases because they are able to focus on the individual relationships created and lives
transformed rather than revenue or growth.
ASP does not maintain any national partnerships at this time, which is one of the critiques
I would have for the organization as a whole. While some local governments can provide
financial backing, this is even limited. I believe a partnership with groups that could provide
expertise, such as contracting agencies, as well as hardware partners, such as Loweโ€™s or Home
Depot, would both go a long way in expanding our program and increasing our budget so we are
able to make even more of an impact.
Week 4: Key Activities. Key Resources. What are the critical activities that occur daily,
weekly, and monthly? What activities are central to the companyโ€™s success? What are the
Nagy 7
activities that effect the company environment? How does this effect productivity and the work
culture?
At my center in Fentress County, TN our weekly operations have two main activities,
construction repairs on 12-14 homes per week and volunteer programming. My staff of 4 and I
were responsible daily and weekly for identifying the homes we will work on, developing
community relationships, managing all aspects of construction, facility upkeep, and evening
programming for volunteers. Each individual staffer has additional individual responsibilities
such as finance, volunteer coordination, center operations, and logistical aspects of the program.
My individual responsibilities include managing the other 4 staffers and their work, manage our
countyโ€™s summer budget, manage all construction projects and their long-term goals, maintain
community relationships, communicate with our office headquarters about our operations, and
manage all crises. Our organizationโ€™s success relies on all of these aspects of our work being
done with our full attention and with an extremely positive attitude. Due to our various
stakeholders it is important that every aspect of our work is done to the fullest of our ability to
ensure everyone is getting what they need from the organization. Due to the large amount of
tasks that are needed of our summer staff, productivity is an extremely high priority of every
single day of every single week. The work is hard, the days are long, and it can be an extremely
challenging experience. The work culture is extremely unique due to the uniqueness of our work
and our environments. To describe the work culture at ASP I would turn to the โ€œwork hard, play
hardโ€ mindset; our work always comes first, and while it can be stressful and overwhelming, our
staff makes time to have fun with one another, to reflect on our experiences, and grow as
individuals.
Nagy 8
Week 5: Finance. What is the organizationโ€™s cost structure? What are the different revenue
streams? What activity or service has the greatest profit margin? What activity or service has the
greatest social impact?
Appalachia Service Project works with an annual budget of about $2.5 million, and is a
registered 501c3 nonprofit organization. They operate under 3 main revenue streamsโ€”volunteer
fees, donations, and government funding and grants. Each volunteer pays $325/week to cover
their room and board and helps to fund the project materials, operational costs, and employee
salaries. A large portion of this budget is maintained through large donors, and as UNC-CH
professor, Dr. Johnson, would say, โ€œrelies on the kindness of strangers.โ€ This has always been a
part of ASPโ€™s revenue stream for itโ€™s 48 years of operation and has only grown over time.
The greatest profit margin is created through our volunteer experience. When a volunteer is able
to work on a home for a full week, build a relationship with that family, and see the hardships an
average family in Central Appalachia faces, they are increasingly likely to monetarily support
our mission.
In addition it is important to note the entire mission of ASP surrounds the social impact it
makes. By repairing homes to make them warmer, safer and drier ASP is impacting the lives of
many individual families in Central Appalachia. By creating a positive, relational, and
transformative volunteer experience, our volunteers, both high school-aged students and adults
of many backgrounds, are impacted. By stimulating the local economy with our material
purchases and population increase, we are impacting the economic health of the region. And
through of marketing, both formal and word of mouth, we are spreading the story of Central
Appalachia throughout the U.S. so that people know that poverty is here in our own backyard,
and we need to tackle this first before going on less impactful short-term mission trips overseas.
Nagy 9
Week 6: Drucker. Refresh yourself on Druckerโ€™s principles of innovation. Where do you see
these at play in your company?
Druckerโ€™s principles of innovation focus on the concept of look, ask and listen to lead to
innovation. I believe this is at play within ASP as a whole and is proven from summer to
summer. I have had the opportunity to work with ASP for 7 summersโ€”4 as a volunteer and 3 as
a summer staffer. Throughout my time with this organization I have been blown away with the
amount of feedback that is requested, processed, and genuinely taken into consideration. Each
volunteer group is given a survey at the end of their week volunteering with us, feedback
meetings twice a week with members of the summer staff, as well as the contact information of
the summer staffโ€™s boss. The staff is also given extensive opportunities for feedback, both
through formal feedback with supervisors and final surveys and suggestions for future summers.
All of this feedback is then taken by our senior leadership into a weekend-long meeting in the
fall where it is discussed in detail and plans begin to be formed for solving major problems that
come up. Throughout my summers on staff I can clearly see that this feedback (the look) leads
to our leadership asking questions about what lead to these problems, and they are actively
listening to concerns to make innovative improvements. Each summer there are tangible
changes made to the summer program, and the senior leadership thoroughly explains the
reasoning behind each change as the summer staff is asked to implement these changes.
Week 7: People. Who is in leadership? What qualities do these people possess that make them
successful? What is the founderโ€™s story? What is the team dynamic in the company? Tell us
about your manager. What has s/he done well? Where is there room for improvement?
Nagy 10
CEO, Walter Crouch, and CMO, Melisa Miller lead our organization. They work with an
executive leadership board to manage and run ASP, and we also have a board of directors to
discuss long-range plans and goals for the organization. Each of these leaders brings a diverse
set of experiences, skills and strengths to the group dynamic that allows ASP to thrive and come
up with the best possible solution to each decision being made. I have been overly impressed
with the public speaking skills of these individuals and am aware of how integral this skill is to
starting a business, gaining funders and supporters, and thriving as new or growing business.
The founderโ€™s name is Tex Evans who has recently passed away. Tex was a minister who had
the innovative idea that high school aged youth could do good, safe, quality construction and
raise homes in Central Appalachia out of substandard housing. With his background in the
church, this is where he focused his volunteer recruitment and fundraising efforts, and that is still
seen today as the majority of our organizationโ€™s supporters are religiously affiliated. Tex, like
our current leaders, had the ability to articulate his vision, needs, and goals for ASP in a way that
made those around him want to get involved and support the organizationโ€”to me, this is what is
most important for a new business, the ability to persuade those around you to join you to make
it a movement of many, rather than the dream of one.
My current manager is Kristina Rowles, she has been involved in ASP for 5 summers and
has recently accepted her position with ASP full time. During the summer she managed mine
and 3 other counties of operations. The Center Directors directly reported to her and she helped
to handle major conflicts and issues that arose, and ensured that center operations were running
smoothly and were properly being managed by the Center Director. Kristina was exceptional
with her communication and made sure to always check in with the Center Director on a very
consistent basis and provided a lot of support throughout the summer with managing the staff as
Nagy 11
well as guidance during major decisions that had to be made throughout the summer. In terms of
areas of improvement I think she could have done a better job setting initial expectations with
me, especially considering the short length of my employment as there is less time for
adjustment. Initially I was concerned with how infrequently she would check in on my progress,
but learned to enjoy that trust and freedom that she had in me. Not knowing how she wanted
things done or if I was on track to completing all of my assigned tasks made me very nervous,
but as time went on I realized that I was doing all the things that I needed to be doing and that
was what was leading to her trust in me.
Week 8: SWOT analysis. Break down your company: strengths, weakness, opportunities, and
threats. If you were in leadership, where would you innovate, pivot, or strategically develop your
company?
Appalachia Service Projectโ€™s strengths include their relationships with both those they
work for and those they work with. Customer service for volunteers and donors, as well as
building relationships with homeowners we work for, is emphasized to all those who work for
the organization and is integral to every aspect of our work.
ASPโ€™s main weakness is its revenue streams, which are by nature unreliable. All 3 of
their revenue streams could dwindle on any given year and would be detrimental to the company.
Volunteerโ€™s could decide on another way to spend their vacation time, losing the revenue from
volunteer fees. Government grants and support could be reallocated. And donations will always
fluctuate in an unpredictable way. ASP has built itself up on the kindness of strangers and itโ€™s
instability could cause a collapse if giving trends were to decline.
Nagy 12
ASPโ€™s opportunities lie in their social impact and selfless nature. They are able to
provide a very tangible product for their donations, while still being able to prove their great
impact. When you donate to ASP, you can envision that money going into materials to repair
homes, while also hearing about how influential something as small as a repaired roof can have
on a family. ASP operates under the Housing First principles, that believe that the first step to
getting someoneโ€™s life back on track is a safe, sanitary place to live. Things like job prospects
and economic sustainability are not possible without a consistent place to live, and ASP works to
provide that for those living in Central Appalachia. Being able to see these tangible influences is
extremely important for donors and participants of the organization.
Some threats of ASP include the failing popularity of short-term mission trips. There has
been a lot of recent push back against short term missions because many critics believe that their
only self-serving and unable to provide any substantial impact. This can be combined with the
decreasing participation of youth-aged individuals involving themselves in organized church, as
that is the main place where groups form to volunteer with ASP. If the youth numbers are
decreasing, and these groups are opting for more local, consistent mission work, then ASPโ€™s
overall volunteer numbers will decrease. The volunteer decrease will result in a revenue
decrease and a social impact decrease until it is no longer a sustainable business.
If I were in leadership with ASP I would look for these opportunities to innovate, pivot,
and strategically develop. I would begin by trying to move ASP away from a church-based pool
of volunteers and instead reach out to those of all backgrounds to volunteer with us. There is
nothing about our work that should be tied to religion, our founding values may be Christian-
based, but I think those can still hold true without excluding those who are not religious. Finding
ways to form volunteer groups outside of the church, and targeting different markets through
Nagy 13
volunteer recruitment are huge. And secondly, I would look for an additional, more stable
revenue stream to help support ASPโ€™s mission that could supplement weaker fiscal years. I do
not have an idea yet of what that would be, but finding a product or a service that is within our
expertise could make a huge difference in the outlook of the organization.
Work Deliverables:
The three main aspects of my job this summer included managing the budget for the
Fentress County center operations, determining and overseeing the long-range plans for all
construction projects, and managing my 4 employees in their individual and collective
responsibilities. Below I have provided a few visual deliverables of the budget and construction
management aspects of my work.
I. Budget Management
Our countyโ€™s spending was tracked by our Finance Coordinator through our program
Finance Accelerator (FA). In FA all receipts of spending and incoming donations were entered
in their corresponding tabs (Expenses, Cash, Checks, Square, In-Kind, and Deposits), which
were then calculated into the Finance Summary spreadsheet. The main FA spreadsheet and the
various input areas follow:
Nagy 14
Nagy 15
Nagy 16
Our overall budget was determined by the number of volunteers and crews we had per
week. One of the challenges of working in a volunteer-based organization is fast-paced change
that frequently took place. These numbers determined my final $67,000 budget based on $540
per work crew per week for supplies and materials for our construction work and $27 per
volunteer per week for their food. Managing our budget is challenging as volunteers will
frequently add/drop volunteers, and in extreme cases entire work crews, throughout the summer.
This lapse in communication made planning and bulk spending very challenging to ensure we
did not buy goods for volunteers who did not come. Below is the chart in FA where we inputted
our final numbers, which the program translated into our full budget calculations that will follow.
As Center Director, I used the financial summaries to make decisions about our spending
in order to ensure we remained within budget. I frequently discussed these numbers with my
boss, and any line item that was over budget was an extenuating circumstance that had to be
preapproved. My final summaries are shown in the charts below:
Nagy 17
Nagy 18
Finally, FA supplied me with graphs to provide a visual representation of my budget
based on what consistent spending would be throughout the summer. This tool allowed me to
see on a weekly basis if I needed to increase or decrease spending, or push for larger donations,
in order to bring myself closer to my goal line.
Nagy 19
II. Construction Management
My staff and I were responsible for finding and selecting our projects through Initial
Home Visits. All homes were presented to me and I made the final decisions about which homes
we would work on throughout the summer, and which homes we had to deny. After a home was
selected I signed official paperwork with the homeowner and developed long-range plans for the
construction that we were going to undertake. These plans considered the necessary order of
operations that needed to be taken for the project, considered our overall budget to make sure
expensive projects were evenly distributed throughout the summer and were balanced with less
expensive work, were within the time frame of our summer to be completed, and within the skill
level of our incoming volunteers. Plans changed fluidly as a variety of factors arose and it was
my responsibility to ensure I remained organized with the long-range plans and communicated
these changes with my staff. Throughout the summer each staffer oversaw the construction on a
few of these projects and reporter progress back to me each night; during these meetings we
problem solved issues that had arisen throughout the day, discusses additional materials they
would need for the next dayโ€™s work, and discussed if they were on track with my long-range plan
for that project. By the end of our 7 weeks of volunteers, my county had worked on 16 different
homes, completing an impressive amount of projects. Below I have included before and after
photographs of as sample of our work with short descriptions of these projects (for the privacy of
the families I will refer to each home with the Code Name it received and was known by
throughout the summer).
Nagy 20
i. The Secret Box
Front exterior wall replacement and new siding:
New foundation, piers and band joist repair:
Nagy 21
Interior work (floor repair, ceiling support, drywall, plumbing, kitchen cabinets and appliances):
Nagy 22
ii. Jellyfish Jam
Hug Systemโ€”exterior insulation, new siding and roof:
iii. Pickles
Underpinning and Wheelchair Ramp:
Nagy 23
Reflection:
The Entrepreneurship Minor as a whole has been an incredibly valuable, eye-opening
experience for me here at UNC. Each class has allowed me to learn a great deal about the world
of business startups that I would otherwise not have been able to comprehend on such a deep
level. The classes have been heavily hands-on, which helped me to engage with the subject
matter deeply, though I sometimes felt it was at the cost of a more thorough teaching of
conceptual material. I believe one thing that could help students learn more from the minor
would be for an instructor to walk the class through a startup example that mirrors concepts
being discussed in class. By having an instructor-guided example, students would be more
prepared to develop their own business ideas, and would eventually produce better products. In
addition, I felt that throughout the minor classes there was very little feedback given to student
performance and development of ideas. While I understand they are large classes, my groups
often felt we were aimlessly working towards an end product that we either did not understand,
or we were developing a product that would not actively solve the issue we were addressing. I
appreciate that I was able to learn the value of failure in entrepreneurship, but in a classroom
environment I feel that I missed the opportunity to understand what a success startup would take.
My internship this summer allowed me to take on a great deal of leadership, and taught
me what it is like to effectively manage a staff dynamic and business operations. While I did
have a hierarchy above me that dictated my actions to a degree, I was able to make a lot of real-
time decisions, interact with customers and clients face-to-face, manage financials, develop
organizational and operational systems, raise funds, and solve problems with innovative
solutions to please multiple stakeholders. I learned the nuanced art of developing an
organizational culture, and how difficult it can be to foster the work environment you desire.
Nagy 24
While part of it surrounds the individuality of your employees, a great deal of it fell on myself as
the leader to set that tone early and consistently. The internship also prepared me for the
managerial aspects of running a startup, and how small decisions can have very large impacts. I
experienced the challenge weighing multiple solutions by how each would affect the
organizationโ€™s image, financial status, and longevity. And while in those moments this summer I
often chose the riskier solution, hoping for the higher reward, and despite the fact that all of my
decisions this summer had positive outcomes, these decisions took an emotional toll on me.
Through formal performance reviews and casual feedback I can affirm that I was
successful at my job this summer; my staff dynamic was strong, I finished my summer 6% under
a budget of $67,000, I completed work on 16 homes to bring them out of substandard condition,
housed over 600 volunteers at my center, and improved Fentress County community member
relationships with ASP. While I have proven that I have the ability to carry out these tasks
though management and innovation, I came to the important realization this summer that this is
not where my passion lies. My passions lie in operations, carrying out a vision to achieve a goal.
My entrepreneurial skills surround the innovative development of an operational system,
breaking out of the mundane methods of work. I do not enjoy the bigger picture thinking, the
stress of making transformative decisions for an organization, or the idea of spending the
majority of my time acquiring funding. It is through this program that I know I am not ready to
lead my own startup, these are not where my skills lie; however, it is through this program that I
know the value of innovative thinking on all levels of organizational work, which is something I
will carry with me into my future beyond UNC.
Thank you for all that you do.
Nagy 25
Business Model Canvas:
Other:
Management Research:
๏‚ท http://www.forbes.com/sites/victorlipman/2013/09/09/5-things-the-best-managers-do-
and-dont-do/#7432dca23edd
๏‚ท https://leadersinheels.com/career/6-management-styles-and-when-best-to-use-them-the-
leaders-tool-kit/
Nagy 26
๏‚ท https://hbr.org/2005/03/what-great-managers-do
Housing First Initiative:
๏‚ท http://www.endhomelessness.org/pages/housing_first
๏‚ท https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/local/wp/2015/03/04/housing-first-approach-
works-for-homeless-study-says/
Fentress County Research:
๏‚ท http://jamestowntn.gov/sites/default/files/MunicipalCode.pdf
๏‚ท https://www.tn.gov/main/article/fentress-county
๏‚ท http://www.iccsafe.org/about-icc/government-relations/map/tennessee/

More Related Content

Similar to Working for Appalachia Service Project

AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
Ted Miller
ย 
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Denis Rigdon
ย 
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Denis Rigdon
ย 
Lauren Sword- resume LNHA
Lauren Sword- resume LNHALauren Sword- resume LNHA
Lauren Sword- resume LNHA
Lauren Sword
ย 
Work With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care ForceWork With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care Force
City Year
ย 
Work With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care ForceWork With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care Force
cityyearcareforce
ย 
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
Jessica Solis
ย 
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA InitiativesAmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
benshap16
ย 
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA InitiativesAmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
benshap16
ย 

Similar to Working for Appalachia Service Project (20)

AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
AmeriCorps Agency Engagement and Outreach Plan 2017
ย 
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
ย 
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
Accomplishments as of 07 17-07
ย 
Lauren Sword- resume LNHA
Lauren Sword- resume LNHALauren Sword- resume LNHA
Lauren Sword- resume LNHA
ย 
2015 KSA Outline
2015 KSA Outline2015 KSA Outline
2015 KSA Outline
ย 
Sheryl smith g resume (1) (1)
Sheryl smith g resume (1) (1)Sheryl smith g resume (1) (1)
Sheryl smith g resume (1) (1)
ย 
Work With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care ForceWork With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care Force
ย 
Work With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care ForceWork With City Year Care Force
Work With City Year Care Force
ย 
Sandra weiss b res
Sandra weiss b resSandra weiss b res
Sandra weiss b res
ย 
7d1568f70f
7d1568f70f7d1568f70f
7d1568f70f
ย 
HSV 405.pptx
HSV 405.pptxHSV 405.pptx
HSV 405.pptx
ย 
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
2015 Seeds Annual Report FINAL
ย 
Proposal to Create the Building Healthy Communities Nonprofit
Proposal to Create the Building Healthy Communities NonprofitProposal to Create the Building Healthy Communities Nonprofit
Proposal to Create the Building Healthy Communities Nonprofit
ย 
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA InitiativesAmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
ย 
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA InitiativesAmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
AmeriCorps VISTA Initiatives
ย 
Second chance trust chance annual report 2015 (7)
Second chance trust chance annual report 2015 (7)Second chance trust chance annual report 2015 (7)
Second chance trust chance annual report 2015 (7)
ย 
Welcome Ppt
Welcome PptWelcome Ppt
Welcome Ppt
ย 
Lava Mae
Lava MaeLava Mae
Lava Mae
ย 
Program Proposal Presentation
Program Proposal PresentationProgram Proposal Presentation
Program Proposal Presentation
ย 
SSYC_Strategic_Plan
SSYC_Strategic_PlanSSYC_Strategic_Plan
SSYC_Strategic_Plan
ย 

More from Cara Nagy

More from Cara Nagy (6)

An Organizational Communication Analysis of the ASP Culture
An Organizational Communication Analysis of the ASP CultureAn Organizational Communication Analysis of the ASP Culture
An Organizational Communication Analysis of the ASP Culture
ย 
Bodies, Representation, and Lammily
Bodies, Representation, and LammilyBodies, Representation, and Lammily
Bodies, Representation, and Lammily
ย 
How YouTube Shapes Personal Identity
How YouTube Shapes Personal Identity How YouTube Shapes Personal Identity
How YouTube Shapes Personal Identity
ย 
Organization Ethics Get Personal
Organization Ethics Get PersonalOrganization Ethics Get Personal
Organization Ethics Get Personal
ย 
H&M's Corporate Social Responsibility Commitment to Sustainability
H&M's Corporate Social Responsibility Commitment to SustainabilityH&M's Corporate Social Responsibility Commitment to Sustainability
H&M's Corporate Social Responsibility Commitment to Sustainability
ย 
Review Essay Outlining the Complexities of the Insider-Outsider Relationship ...
Review Essay Outlining the Complexities of the Insider-Outsider Relationship ...Review Essay Outlining the Complexities of the Insider-Outsider Relationship ...
Review Essay Outlining the Complexities of the Insider-Outsider Relationship ...
ย 

Recently uploaded

Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
Chandigarh Call girls 9053900678 Call girls in Chandigarh
ย 
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
SUHANI PANDEY
ย 
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
SUHANI PANDEY
ย 
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
MOHANI PANDEY
ย 
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 BookingVIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
dharasingh5698
ย 

Recently uploaded (20)

Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
Russian๐ŸŒDazzling Hottie Getโ˜Ž๏ธ 9053900678 โ˜Ž๏ธcall girl In Chandigarh By Chandig...
ย 
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
VIP Model Call Girls Shikrapur ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K t...
ย 
Call On 6297143586 Viman Nagar Call Girls In All Pune 24/7 Provide Call With...
Call On 6297143586  Viman Nagar Call Girls In All Pune 24/7 Provide Call With...Call On 6297143586  Viman Nagar Call Girls In All Pune 24/7 Provide Call With...
Call On 6297143586 Viman Nagar Call Girls In All Pune 24/7 Provide Call With...
ย 
Junnar ( Call Girls ) Pune 6297143586 Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
Junnar ( Call Girls ) Pune  6297143586  Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...Junnar ( Call Girls ) Pune  6297143586  Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
Junnar ( Call Girls ) Pune 6297143586 Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
ย 
TEST BANK For Essentials of Negotiation, 7th Edition by Roy Lewicki, Bruce Ba...
TEST BANK For Essentials of Negotiation, 7th Edition by Roy Lewicki, Bruce Ba...TEST BANK For Essentials of Negotiation, 7th Edition by Roy Lewicki, Bruce Ba...
TEST BANK For Essentials of Negotiation, 7th Edition by Roy Lewicki, Bruce Ba...
ย 
An Atoll Futures Research Institute? Presentation for CANCC
An Atoll Futures Research Institute? Presentation for CANCCAn Atoll Futures Research Institute? Presentation for CANCC
An Atoll Futures Research Institute? Presentation for CANCC
ย 
A Press for the Planet: Journalism in the face of the Environmental Crisis
A Press for the Planet: Journalism in the face of the Environmental CrisisA Press for the Planet: Journalism in the face of the Environmental Crisis
A Press for the Planet: Journalism in the face of the Environmental Crisis
ย 
Akurdi ( Call Girls ) Pune 6297143586 Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
Akurdi ( Call Girls ) Pune  6297143586  Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...Akurdi ( Call Girls ) Pune  6297143586  Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
Akurdi ( Call Girls ) Pune 6297143586 Hot Model With Sexy Bhabi Ready For S...
ย 
Tuvalu Coastal Adaptation Project (TCAP)
Tuvalu Coastal Adaptation Project (TCAP)Tuvalu Coastal Adaptation Project (TCAP)
Tuvalu Coastal Adaptation Project (TCAP)
ย 
Government e Marketplace GeM Presentation
Government e Marketplace GeM PresentationGovernment e Marketplace GeM Presentation
Government e Marketplace GeM Presentation
ย 
Call Girls Nanded City Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
Call Girls Nanded City Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance BookingCall Girls Nanded City Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
Call Girls Nanded City Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
ย 
Regional Snapshot Atlanta Aging Trends 2024
Regional Snapshot Atlanta Aging Trends 2024Regional Snapshot Atlanta Aging Trends 2024
Regional Snapshot Atlanta Aging Trends 2024
ย 
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Dapodi โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Dapodi โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Dapodi โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Dapodi โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Serv...
ย 
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
VIP Model Call Girls Narhe ( Pune ) Call ON 8005736733 Starting From 5K to 25...
ย 
The U.S. Budget and Economic Outlook (Presentation)
The U.S. Budget and Economic Outlook (Presentation)The U.S. Budget and Economic Outlook (Presentation)
The U.S. Budget and Economic Outlook (Presentation)
ย 
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Bhosari โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Ser...
Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Bhosari โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Ser...Top Rated  Pune Call Girls Bhosari โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Ser...
Top Rated Pune Call Girls Bhosari โŸŸ 6297143586 โŸŸ Call Me For Genuine Sex Ser...
ย 
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
Get Premium Budhwar Peth Call Girls (8005736733) 24x7 Rate 15999 with A/c Roo...
ย 
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 BookingVIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
VIP Call Girls Agra 7001035870 Whatsapp Number, 24/07 Booking
ย 
Call Girls Sangamwadi Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
Call Girls Sangamwadi Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance BookingCall Girls Sangamwadi Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
Call Girls Sangamwadi Call Me 7737669865 Budget Friendly No Advance Booking
ย 
Financing strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCC
Financing strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCCFinancing strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCC
Financing strategies for adaptation. Presentation for CANCC
ย 

Working for Appalachia Service Project

  • 1. Nagy 1 Working for Appalachia Service Project Overview Description: This summer I worked as a Center Director for Appalachia Service Project. My job was fast paced, strenuous, and required a great deal of professionalism and responsibility. As a Center Director (CD) I ran one of ASPโ€™s 26 county summer centers. Each center is responsible for the home repair operations within a county within Central Appalachia, and I was stationed in Fentress County, Tennessee. I had a direct supervisor, a Program Manager, to oversee Fentress and 3 additional counties and was based out of Johnson City, Tennessee, so I was the point person on site 24/7. The center operations that I managed included the repairs on 16 different homes in which I lead a staff team of 4 employees in identifying these projects, selecting the homes from the many applications we received, planning the construction that was to be done, purchasing the correct materials needed, and managing the volunteer labor on a daily basis while construction was underway. In addition, my staff and I facilitated close to 100 volunteers per week for 7 weeks, ensuring they were comfortable in their housing arrangements, properly fed, and provided nightly programming to help them reflect on their week of service, grow in their spirituality, and learn more about the poverty in Fentress County and the region of Central Appalachia. While many aspects of these collective responsibilities were performed by every member of my staff, I was responsible for ensuring these operations as a whole ran smoothly, assigned daily tasks to individuals, responded to any volunteer or homeowner complaints, was the primary contact for any problems that arose, and led a nightly staff meeting to communicate operations and needs within my staff. In addition to managing our communal responsibilities, I also
  • 2. Nagy 2 oversaw each stafferโ€™s individual positional responsibilities in order to maintain smooth and holistic operations at my facility. These job requirements include the following: the Finance Coordinator tracked our budget, inputted all receipts, and documented donations; the Logistics Coordinator managed the upkeep and stocking of our Supply Room, ensured needed materials were bulk-ordered and appropriately delivered to their correct sites, and maintained our company vehicles; the Operations Coordinator oversaw the cleaning and upkeep of our facility, purchased all of our food, managed our hired cooks in the preparation of meals, and put on a weekly picnic for the families we served and the volunteers; and finally, the Volunteer Coordinator executed all pre-trip communication with each group that came to volunteer with us, updated the centerโ€™s Facebook page twice a week, documented project progress with photographs, and conducted data entry into the company data base, ASPire. In our nightly meetings I ensured that all positional deadlines were being met and that all of their work was done to the standard of excellence I maintained for my center, but also gaged the overall health and happiness of my staffers to ensure that their individual needs were being met. My individual responsibilities as a CD also included the management of our centerโ€™s budget to ensure we were on track, determined our long-range plans for each construction project which dictated the work we did and the timeline of that work to ensure it fit within our budget, gave formal positional feedback to each of my employees twice throughout the summer, filled out all paperwork with homeowners, hired subcontractors where needed, built positive community relationships, applied for additional funding for all plumbing and electrical projects through an ASP grant, regularly communicated with my Program Manager and other members of our headquarter office, and directly responded to all crises that arouse (including volunteer injuries on site, dangerous weather, damaged community relationships, potential safety risks on a
  • 3. Nagy 3 site, and a car accident just to name a few direct examples). The job was overwhelming at times and stressful, but it taught me about managing people, developing systems, customer service, and how critical attention to detail can be, but the main thing to know about my job was this summer was that I was in charge of making the chaos look effortless and responding to needs in a timely manner despite the wide variety of other things I always had going on. Weekly Journal: Week 1: Value Proposition. What is the VP of your company? Appalachia Service Project is a non-profit home repair ministry based in Central Appalachia providing free, major, emergency construction to families living in substandard housing through volunteer labor with staff management. As a Christian-founded organization we are devoted to providing a relational ministry that promotes love and acceptance for all those our staff comes in contact withโ€”volunteers, donors, community members, and homeowners alike. Our belief that each human is imbued with dignity and self-worth and that safe, sanitary housing is a basic human right drives our work. Week 2: Customers. Who is your customer? What is the target market? What strategies are implemented to reach this target market? What are the channels by which your company reaches their customers? How does your company manage customer relationships? ASP has dual โ€œcustomersโ€ that serve different aspects of its service who are referred to as its customers and its clients. Our clients receive our home repair services free of charge, while our customers are paying our operations fee in exchange for a short-term mission experience.
  • 4. Nagy 4 We define our clients as the families receiving our construction services and whose homes are being repaired. This target market includes the families living in Central Appalachia who are identified as living in substandard conditions, in which their homes are unsafe and unhealthy to live in. ASP works in individual counties each summerโ€” in 2016 we served 26 counties across North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia, and Kentucky. The 2016 target market included the homes in each of these counties currently in substandard conditions, and we made our selections of individuals who had submitted an application to ASP. The home selection process includes the review of these applications, staff members visiting the home, and then a Center Director selecting the homes we will be able to begin construction for based on factors such as time, budget, volunteer skill level. We aim to work on 300-500 homes across our service area each summer, but that still requires us to turn down 1 in 5 applications we receive. We reach our clients through our community contacts throughout the year, who are individuals and other organizations present in these communities throughout the year who are able to spread the word about our services. We manage all of these relationships during the summer within the counties with constant visits and communication to foster strong partnerships, and then on our offseason (non-summer months when we do not have a full staff or volunteers present) ASP has a County Set-Up team who maintains and develops these relationships so they are ready for operations each summer. The second aspect of our system is our customers who are our volunteers. Our services are completely free to our homeowners, and it is our volunteers and additional donors who fund the majority of our work. Each individual volunteer pays a fee for their week with us that covers their food and housing for the week and contributes to our cost of materials for our projects, staff salaries, and operational expenses. (I will later discuss ASPโ€™s additional revenue streams that
  • 5. Nagy 5 complement volunteer fees, such as donors, grants and governmental funding.) ASP has a strong focus on customer service to ensure that our revenue streams remain plentiful so we can continue to provide our services. Our target market for our volunteers and donors are focused on mainline denominational churches, specifically their youth programsโ€”with a heavy focus on states along the east coast who would have lower travel costs for a potential trip. Our centers are filled with a wide variety of groups and churches, most of which get recruited at different youth conferences, informational fairs, or by word of mouth. ASP has an Advancement Department that is responsible for the recruitment and retention of our volunteer groups. Once a group has been recruited to our ministry, they arrive at our ASP center and then the center staff (the 4-6 group of college-aged summer staffers, lead by a Center Director, which is my position this summer) is responsible for providing them a positive experience to make them want to come back year-to- year. Week 3: Key Partners. Who are key partners of your company? How does your company interact with the local community? Are there any national or international partnerships? How does this affect the company? ASP partners with a lot of local organizations within each of their summer counties. There has been national push back against short-term missions, and ASP has increased their focus on being a partner in the communities they serve to ensure that we are a year-round presence and not just a 7-week summer tornado when we have volunteers on sites. Each county varies in their community partners but the Center Directors are responsible for ensuring we are working as a part of the larger community. We interact very closely with each of our 26 communities. Our staff lives in the communities they are serving throughout the summer and
  • 6. Nagy 6 gets to know those who regularly work at the various establishments we are regulars at (i.e. the hardware store, grocery store, restaurants, gas stations, laundry mats). We also serve somewhere between 15-25 homeowners throughout our summer, in which we are working within a familyโ€™s home and we get to know them very closely. One of ASPโ€™s mottos is that we are โ€œa relationship ministry with construction on the sideโ€ and it is practiced daily as we focus on the individuals we serve, the regional issues we see, and how we go about our work. ASP tries to remain focused on our communities, and because we are often a economical beneficiary of a community, we do not have any national or international partnerships. Where we can we purchase construction materials, food and other operational materials from local vendors to boost their economy. By focusing on these local partnerships rather than national ones, we are able to remain small-scale in our operations, focus on the relationship aspects of our work. This focus on local partnerships, ASP is able to keep their small-scale, personable identity even as their size increases because they are able to focus on the individual relationships created and lives transformed rather than revenue or growth. ASP does not maintain any national partnerships at this time, which is one of the critiques I would have for the organization as a whole. While some local governments can provide financial backing, this is even limited. I believe a partnership with groups that could provide expertise, such as contracting agencies, as well as hardware partners, such as Loweโ€™s or Home Depot, would both go a long way in expanding our program and increasing our budget so we are able to make even more of an impact. Week 4: Key Activities. Key Resources. What are the critical activities that occur daily, weekly, and monthly? What activities are central to the companyโ€™s success? What are the
  • 7. Nagy 7 activities that effect the company environment? How does this effect productivity and the work culture? At my center in Fentress County, TN our weekly operations have two main activities, construction repairs on 12-14 homes per week and volunteer programming. My staff of 4 and I were responsible daily and weekly for identifying the homes we will work on, developing community relationships, managing all aspects of construction, facility upkeep, and evening programming for volunteers. Each individual staffer has additional individual responsibilities such as finance, volunteer coordination, center operations, and logistical aspects of the program. My individual responsibilities include managing the other 4 staffers and their work, manage our countyโ€™s summer budget, manage all construction projects and their long-term goals, maintain community relationships, communicate with our office headquarters about our operations, and manage all crises. Our organizationโ€™s success relies on all of these aspects of our work being done with our full attention and with an extremely positive attitude. Due to our various stakeholders it is important that every aspect of our work is done to the fullest of our ability to ensure everyone is getting what they need from the organization. Due to the large amount of tasks that are needed of our summer staff, productivity is an extremely high priority of every single day of every single week. The work is hard, the days are long, and it can be an extremely challenging experience. The work culture is extremely unique due to the uniqueness of our work and our environments. To describe the work culture at ASP I would turn to the โ€œwork hard, play hardโ€ mindset; our work always comes first, and while it can be stressful and overwhelming, our staff makes time to have fun with one another, to reflect on our experiences, and grow as individuals.
  • 8. Nagy 8 Week 5: Finance. What is the organizationโ€™s cost structure? What are the different revenue streams? What activity or service has the greatest profit margin? What activity or service has the greatest social impact? Appalachia Service Project works with an annual budget of about $2.5 million, and is a registered 501c3 nonprofit organization. They operate under 3 main revenue streamsโ€”volunteer fees, donations, and government funding and grants. Each volunteer pays $325/week to cover their room and board and helps to fund the project materials, operational costs, and employee salaries. A large portion of this budget is maintained through large donors, and as UNC-CH professor, Dr. Johnson, would say, โ€œrelies on the kindness of strangers.โ€ This has always been a part of ASPโ€™s revenue stream for itโ€™s 48 years of operation and has only grown over time. The greatest profit margin is created through our volunteer experience. When a volunteer is able to work on a home for a full week, build a relationship with that family, and see the hardships an average family in Central Appalachia faces, they are increasingly likely to monetarily support our mission. In addition it is important to note the entire mission of ASP surrounds the social impact it makes. By repairing homes to make them warmer, safer and drier ASP is impacting the lives of many individual families in Central Appalachia. By creating a positive, relational, and transformative volunteer experience, our volunteers, both high school-aged students and adults of many backgrounds, are impacted. By stimulating the local economy with our material purchases and population increase, we are impacting the economic health of the region. And through of marketing, both formal and word of mouth, we are spreading the story of Central Appalachia throughout the U.S. so that people know that poverty is here in our own backyard, and we need to tackle this first before going on less impactful short-term mission trips overseas.
  • 9. Nagy 9 Week 6: Drucker. Refresh yourself on Druckerโ€™s principles of innovation. Where do you see these at play in your company? Druckerโ€™s principles of innovation focus on the concept of look, ask and listen to lead to innovation. I believe this is at play within ASP as a whole and is proven from summer to summer. I have had the opportunity to work with ASP for 7 summersโ€”4 as a volunteer and 3 as a summer staffer. Throughout my time with this organization I have been blown away with the amount of feedback that is requested, processed, and genuinely taken into consideration. Each volunteer group is given a survey at the end of their week volunteering with us, feedback meetings twice a week with members of the summer staff, as well as the contact information of the summer staffโ€™s boss. The staff is also given extensive opportunities for feedback, both through formal feedback with supervisors and final surveys and suggestions for future summers. All of this feedback is then taken by our senior leadership into a weekend-long meeting in the fall where it is discussed in detail and plans begin to be formed for solving major problems that come up. Throughout my summers on staff I can clearly see that this feedback (the look) leads to our leadership asking questions about what lead to these problems, and they are actively listening to concerns to make innovative improvements. Each summer there are tangible changes made to the summer program, and the senior leadership thoroughly explains the reasoning behind each change as the summer staff is asked to implement these changes. Week 7: People. Who is in leadership? What qualities do these people possess that make them successful? What is the founderโ€™s story? What is the team dynamic in the company? Tell us about your manager. What has s/he done well? Where is there room for improvement?
  • 10. Nagy 10 CEO, Walter Crouch, and CMO, Melisa Miller lead our organization. They work with an executive leadership board to manage and run ASP, and we also have a board of directors to discuss long-range plans and goals for the organization. Each of these leaders brings a diverse set of experiences, skills and strengths to the group dynamic that allows ASP to thrive and come up with the best possible solution to each decision being made. I have been overly impressed with the public speaking skills of these individuals and am aware of how integral this skill is to starting a business, gaining funders and supporters, and thriving as new or growing business. The founderโ€™s name is Tex Evans who has recently passed away. Tex was a minister who had the innovative idea that high school aged youth could do good, safe, quality construction and raise homes in Central Appalachia out of substandard housing. With his background in the church, this is where he focused his volunteer recruitment and fundraising efforts, and that is still seen today as the majority of our organizationโ€™s supporters are religiously affiliated. Tex, like our current leaders, had the ability to articulate his vision, needs, and goals for ASP in a way that made those around him want to get involved and support the organizationโ€”to me, this is what is most important for a new business, the ability to persuade those around you to join you to make it a movement of many, rather than the dream of one. My current manager is Kristina Rowles, she has been involved in ASP for 5 summers and has recently accepted her position with ASP full time. During the summer she managed mine and 3 other counties of operations. The Center Directors directly reported to her and she helped to handle major conflicts and issues that arose, and ensured that center operations were running smoothly and were properly being managed by the Center Director. Kristina was exceptional with her communication and made sure to always check in with the Center Director on a very consistent basis and provided a lot of support throughout the summer with managing the staff as
  • 11. Nagy 11 well as guidance during major decisions that had to be made throughout the summer. In terms of areas of improvement I think she could have done a better job setting initial expectations with me, especially considering the short length of my employment as there is less time for adjustment. Initially I was concerned with how infrequently she would check in on my progress, but learned to enjoy that trust and freedom that she had in me. Not knowing how she wanted things done or if I was on track to completing all of my assigned tasks made me very nervous, but as time went on I realized that I was doing all the things that I needed to be doing and that was what was leading to her trust in me. Week 8: SWOT analysis. Break down your company: strengths, weakness, opportunities, and threats. If you were in leadership, where would you innovate, pivot, or strategically develop your company? Appalachia Service Projectโ€™s strengths include their relationships with both those they work for and those they work with. Customer service for volunteers and donors, as well as building relationships with homeowners we work for, is emphasized to all those who work for the organization and is integral to every aspect of our work. ASPโ€™s main weakness is its revenue streams, which are by nature unreliable. All 3 of their revenue streams could dwindle on any given year and would be detrimental to the company. Volunteerโ€™s could decide on another way to spend their vacation time, losing the revenue from volunteer fees. Government grants and support could be reallocated. And donations will always fluctuate in an unpredictable way. ASP has built itself up on the kindness of strangers and itโ€™s instability could cause a collapse if giving trends were to decline.
  • 12. Nagy 12 ASPโ€™s opportunities lie in their social impact and selfless nature. They are able to provide a very tangible product for their donations, while still being able to prove their great impact. When you donate to ASP, you can envision that money going into materials to repair homes, while also hearing about how influential something as small as a repaired roof can have on a family. ASP operates under the Housing First principles, that believe that the first step to getting someoneโ€™s life back on track is a safe, sanitary place to live. Things like job prospects and economic sustainability are not possible without a consistent place to live, and ASP works to provide that for those living in Central Appalachia. Being able to see these tangible influences is extremely important for donors and participants of the organization. Some threats of ASP include the failing popularity of short-term mission trips. There has been a lot of recent push back against short term missions because many critics believe that their only self-serving and unable to provide any substantial impact. This can be combined with the decreasing participation of youth-aged individuals involving themselves in organized church, as that is the main place where groups form to volunteer with ASP. If the youth numbers are decreasing, and these groups are opting for more local, consistent mission work, then ASPโ€™s overall volunteer numbers will decrease. The volunteer decrease will result in a revenue decrease and a social impact decrease until it is no longer a sustainable business. If I were in leadership with ASP I would look for these opportunities to innovate, pivot, and strategically develop. I would begin by trying to move ASP away from a church-based pool of volunteers and instead reach out to those of all backgrounds to volunteer with us. There is nothing about our work that should be tied to religion, our founding values may be Christian- based, but I think those can still hold true without excluding those who are not religious. Finding ways to form volunteer groups outside of the church, and targeting different markets through
  • 13. Nagy 13 volunteer recruitment are huge. And secondly, I would look for an additional, more stable revenue stream to help support ASPโ€™s mission that could supplement weaker fiscal years. I do not have an idea yet of what that would be, but finding a product or a service that is within our expertise could make a huge difference in the outlook of the organization. Work Deliverables: The three main aspects of my job this summer included managing the budget for the Fentress County center operations, determining and overseeing the long-range plans for all construction projects, and managing my 4 employees in their individual and collective responsibilities. Below I have provided a few visual deliverables of the budget and construction management aspects of my work. I. Budget Management Our countyโ€™s spending was tracked by our Finance Coordinator through our program Finance Accelerator (FA). In FA all receipts of spending and incoming donations were entered in their corresponding tabs (Expenses, Cash, Checks, Square, In-Kind, and Deposits), which were then calculated into the Finance Summary spreadsheet. The main FA spreadsheet and the various input areas follow:
  • 16. Nagy 16 Our overall budget was determined by the number of volunteers and crews we had per week. One of the challenges of working in a volunteer-based organization is fast-paced change that frequently took place. These numbers determined my final $67,000 budget based on $540 per work crew per week for supplies and materials for our construction work and $27 per volunteer per week for their food. Managing our budget is challenging as volunteers will frequently add/drop volunteers, and in extreme cases entire work crews, throughout the summer. This lapse in communication made planning and bulk spending very challenging to ensure we did not buy goods for volunteers who did not come. Below is the chart in FA where we inputted our final numbers, which the program translated into our full budget calculations that will follow. As Center Director, I used the financial summaries to make decisions about our spending in order to ensure we remained within budget. I frequently discussed these numbers with my boss, and any line item that was over budget was an extenuating circumstance that had to be preapproved. My final summaries are shown in the charts below:
  • 18. Nagy 18 Finally, FA supplied me with graphs to provide a visual representation of my budget based on what consistent spending would be throughout the summer. This tool allowed me to see on a weekly basis if I needed to increase or decrease spending, or push for larger donations, in order to bring myself closer to my goal line.
  • 19. Nagy 19 II. Construction Management My staff and I were responsible for finding and selecting our projects through Initial Home Visits. All homes were presented to me and I made the final decisions about which homes we would work on throughout the summer, and which homes we had to deny. After a home was selected I signed official paperwork with the homeowner and developed long-range plans for the construction that we were going to undertake. These plans considered the necessary order of operations that needed to be taken for the project, considered our overall budget to make sure expensive projects were evenly distributed throughout the summer and were balanced with less expensive work, were within the time frame of our summer to be completed, and within the skill level of our incoming volunteers. Plans changed fluidly as a variety of factors arose and it was my responsibility to ensure I remained organized with the long-range plans and communicated these changes with my staff. Throughout the summer each staffer oversaw the construction on a few of these projects and reporter progress back to me each night; during these meetings we problem solved issues that had arisen throughout the day, discusses additional materials they would need for the next dayโ€™s work, and discussed if they were on track with my long-range plan for that project. By the end of our 7 weeks of volunteers, my county had worked on 16 different homes, completing an impressive amount of projects. Below I have included before and after photographs of as sample of our work with short descriptions of these projects (for the privacy of the families I will refer to each home with the Code Name it received and was known by throughout the summer).
  • 20. Nagy 20 i. The Secret Box Front exterior wall replacement and new siding: New foundation, piers and band joist repair:
  • 21. Nagy 21 Interior work (floor repair, ceiling support, drywall, plumbing, kitchen cabinets and appliances):
  • 22. Nagy 22 ii. Jellyfish Jam Hug Systemโ€”exterior insulation, new siding and roof: iii. Pickles Underpinning and Wheelchair Ramp:
  • 23. Nagy 23 Reflection: The Entrepreneurship Minor as a whole has been an incredibly valuable, eye-opening experience for me here at UNC. Each class has allowed me to learn a great deal about the world of business startups that I would otherwise not have been able to comprehend on such a deep level. The classes have been heavily hands-on, which helped me to engage with the subject matter deeply, though I sometimes felt it was at the cost of a more thorough teaching of conceptual material. I believe one thing that could help students learn more from the minor would be for an instructor to walk the class through a startup example that mirrors concepts being discussed in class. By having an instructor-guided example, students would be more prepared to develop their own business ideas, and would eventually produce better products. In addition, I felt that throughout the minor classes there was very little feedback given to student performance and development of ideas. While I understand they are large classes, my groups often felt we were aimlessly working towards an end product that we either did not understand, or we were developing a product that would not actively solve the issue we were addressing. I appreciate that I was able to learn the value of failure in entrepreneurship, but in a classroom environment I feel that I missed the opportunity to understand what a success startup would take. My internship this summer allowed me to take on a great deal of leadership, and taught me what it is like to effectively manage a staff dynamic and business operations. While I did have a hierarchy above me that dictated my actions to a degree, I was able to make a lot of real- time decisions, interact with customers and clients face-to-face, manage financials, develop organizational and operational systems, raise funds, and solve problems with innovative solutions to please multiple stakeholders. I learned the nuanced art of developing an organizational culture, and how difficult it can be to foster the work environment you desire.
  • 24. Nagy 24 While part of it surrounds the individuality of your employees, a great deal of it fell on myself as the leader to set that tone early and consistently. The internship also prepared me for the managerial aspects of running a startup, and how small decisions can have very large impacts. I experienced the challenge weighing multiple solutions by how each would affect the organizationโ€™s image, financial status, and longevity. And while in those moments this summer I often chose the riskier solution, hoping for the higher reward, and despite the fact that all of my decisions this summer had positive outcomes, these decisions took an emotional toll on me. Through formal performance reviews and casual feedback I can affirm that I was successful at my job this summer; my staff dynamic was strong, I finished my summer 6% under a budget of $67,000, I completed work on 16 homes to bring them out of substandard condition, housed over 600 volunteers at my center, and improved Fentress County community member relationships with ASP. While I have proven that I have the ability to carry out these tasks though management and innovation, I came to the important realization this summer that this is not where my passion lies. My passions lie in operations, carrying out a vision to achieve a goal. My entrepreneurial skills surround the innovative development of an operational system, breaking out of the mundane methods of work. I do not enjoy the bigger picture thinking, the stress of making transformative decisions for an organization, or the idea of spending the majority of my time acquiring funding. It is through this program that I know I am not ready to lead my own startup, these are not where my skills lie; however, it is through this program that I know the value of innovative thinking on all levels of organizational work, which is something I will carry with me into my future beyond UNC. Thank you for all that you do.
  • 25. Nagy 25 Business Model Canvas: Other: Management Research: ๏‚ท http://www.forbes.com/sites/victorlipman/2013/09/09/5-things-the-best-managers-do- and-dont-do/#7432dca23edd ๏‚ท https://leadersinheels.com/career/6-management-styles-and-when-best-to-use-them-the- leaders-tool-kit/
  • 26. Nagy 26 ๏‚ท https://hbr.org/2005/03/what-great-managers-do Housing First Initiative: ๏‚ท http://www.endhomelessness.org/pages/housing_first ๏‚ท https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/local/wp/2015/03/04/housing-first-approach- works-for-homeless-study-says/ Fentress County Research: ๏‚ท http://jamestowntn.gov/sites/default/files/MunicipalCode.pdf ๏‚ท https://www.tn.gov/main/article/fentress-county ๏‚ท http://www.iccsafe.org/about-icc/government-relations/map/tennessee/